Publication:
The Role of Verb Fluency in the Detection of Early Cognitive Impairment in Alzheimer's Disease.

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2018

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Alegret, Montserrat
Peretó, Mar
Pérez, Alba
Valero, Sergi
Espinosa, Ana
Ortega, Gemma
Hernández, Isabel
Mauleón, Ana
Rosende-Roca, Maitée
Vargas, Liliana

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Abstract

Verb fluency (VF) is the less commonly used fluency test, despite several studies suggesting its potential as a neuropsychological assessment tool. To investigate the presence of VF deficits in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and mild Alzheimer's disease (AD) dementia; to assess the usefulness of VF in the detection of cognitively healthy (CH) people who will convert to MCI, and from MCI to dementia; and to establish the VF cut-offs useful in the cognitive assessment of Spanish population. 568 CH, 885 MCI, and 367 mild AD dementia individuals were administered the VF test and a complete neuropsychological battery. Longitudinal analyses were performed in 231 CH and 667 MCI subjects to search for VF predictors of diagnosis conversion. A worsening on VF performance from CH, MCI to AD dementia groups was found. Lower performances on VF were significantly related to conversion from CH to MCI/MCI to dementia. When the effect of time to conversion was analyzed, a significant effect of VF was found on the faster conversion from CH to MCI, but not from MCI to dementia. Moreover, VF cut-off scores and sensitivity/specificity values were calculated for 6 conditions (3 age ranges by 2 educational levels). The VF test may be a useful tool for the differential diagnosis of cognitive failure in the elderly. Since VF deficits seem to take place in early stages of the disease, it is a suitable neuropsychological tool for the detection not only of CH people who will convert to MCI, but also from MCI to dementia.

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Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Alzheimer Disease
Case-Control Studies
Cognitive Dysfunction
Cross-Sectional Studies
Early Diagnosis
Executive Function
Female
Humans
Language Tests
Logistic Models
Longitudinal Studies
Male
Middle Aged
Proportional Hazards Models
Sensitivity and Specificity
Spain

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Keywords

Alzheimer’s disease, cognitively healthy, mild cognitive impairment, verb fluency, verbal fluency

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